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Pentecost by R.T. Smith for John Foster West
Squint-eyed and cunning, its tongue split like a wishbone, the canebrake sulls up, cursive spine and the diamonds in spiral like genetic code,
and Joby frets the Stratocaster, its plastic the color of a salted ham. A tambourine’s discs shiver, and Brother Pascal wields the Book’s hot gospel like a blunt instrument. This is
spirit. This is bliss. The words from Heaven would almost strangle you. The Holy Ghost is a rough customer alright, and if someone comes for healing touch,
for translation into a mended soul, a whole body, let him lie beside the altar all shorn and shocked and willing, sing amen, say grace abounding.
and the current sizzles, the tail beads buzz, as the road to Zion is not all gleam-gold. Wind scratching poplar limbs against cracked board-and-batten says
stormy heart. You can translate any syllable into yearning, the Lord’s will, as the rattler agitates, this being winter, his deep sleep stolen by a prophet’s
hands clapping, raw notes of “power in the blood.” He’s a mean messenger, unguessable, and Brother Harvey Robbins now cradling him
has the look of a man ready for crisis. Come rapture, come venom, that double ivory stab so quick you’re not sure at first, then certain. It leaves limbs
withered but quickened. For some of us in the lantern light, in the Carver’s Cove church house where the floor rattles like a loom room, a coal scuttle:
we know something is coming. Snake-shakers, Holy Rollers, Faith Healers from over in Silva or up in Teague, we feel the wild muscle contract.
It’s no cakewalk to dance the devil down. Uproot and undercut, but something is coming right now, something good. Leave your
coppers and dollars in the collection plate. The moon out there is empty, visible as a skillet in night sky. The whoosh of angel feathers is coming,
the serpent’s hiss, the new dialect we will sing to spring sowing, hallelujah. On a good night the serpent will crown some beloved brow like braided brocade
and idle there, benign, as we begin the mortal bargain, breathe the honey air of limber love and behold as the jaws open for a half-sought kiss.
Crystals in the hourglass glisten and summon, the weave of bequeathed bliss, birthright of the cursed helix. Sister, keep your eye on the cross,
take my hand. The words will come. |
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Issue 2 |
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